Globalization
of Media MCM404
VU
Lesson
38
"EMERGING
TRENDS IN INTERNATIONAL
AFFAIRS"
Text
of handout
for
students
Note:
The text of this handout provides
students with the opportunity to
read a part of a remarkable
book
which
is a most thoughtful and
pertinent exploration of the real
factors and forces that
are shaping
international
affairs in the 21st century.
The
excerpt titled: "Surplus imperialism,
war without end" is chapter
7 from the book titled:
"Empire of
Capital"
by Ellen Meiksins Wood, published by Verso,
London & New York,
2003/2005.
Reference
to the comments and brief description of
the book in its paperback version
indicates the quality of
analysis
contained in this unusual study:
"Capitalism
makes possible a new form of
domination by purely economic means,
argues Ellen Meiksins
Wood.
So, surely, even the most
seasoned White House hawk would prefer to
exercise global hegemony in
this
way, without costly colonial
entanglements. Yet, as Wood
powerfully demonstrates, the
economic
empire
of capital has also created
a new and unlimited
militarism.
By
contrasting the new imperialism to historical forms
such as the Roman and
Spanish empires, and
by
tracing
the development of capitalist imperialism back to the
English domination of Ireland
and on the
British
Empire in America and India,
Wood shows how today's
capitalist empire, a global
economy
administered
by many local states, has
come to spawn a new military
doctrine of war without end,
in purpose
or
time.
"A
splendid book" - Eric Hobsbawm, eminent historian. `A
thought-provoking genealogy of
empires
throughout
history' Publishers'
Weekly.
Ellen
Meiksins Wood is the author of several
books, including Democracy against
Capitalism and, with
Verso,
The Retreat from Class
(which won the Deutscher Prize),
Peasant-Citizen and Slave,
The Pristine
Culture
of Capitalism and The Origin
of Capitalism.
111